Strong points
- “I knew them somehow,” said Ira Khan
- “I immediately wrote my parents an email,” said Ira
- “I continued and let go”, she added.
New Delhi:
Aamir Khan’s daughter Ira Khan, who was diagnosed with clinical depression more than four years ago, has never shied away from talking about his mental health on social media. In her latest Instagram entry, the 23-year-old spoke wholeheartedly and talked about factors that may have contributed to her depression. In the video, Ira revealed that she was sexually abused when she was 14. “When I was 14, I was sexually abused. It was a bit of a weird situation in the sense that I didn’t know if the person knew what they were doing, I sort of knew them. didn’t happen every day. ”She added that communicating with her parents Aamir Khan and Reena Dutta had helped her out of the horrific situation she was in.
Ira added in the video: “It took me about a year to make sure they knew what they were doing and this is what they were doing. I immediately wrote my parents an email. and I got out of this situation. ” Ira added that his past experiences were not something that “scared him”. “I wasn’t scared. I felt like it didn’t happen to me anymore and it’s over. I moved on and let go. But it’s not yet something that has marked me for life and something that could make me feel as bad as I felt when I was 18-20, ”she added.
Aamir Khan and the divorce of his ex-wife Reena Dutta had no role to play in “traumatic” her and saying that they are still perfect friends and relatives to her and her brother Junaid, she said in the statement. video. “When I was little, my parents divorced. But it didn’t seem like something that would traumatize me because my parents’ divorce was amicable. They are friends, the whole family is still friends. We are not a family broken by none My parents were very good at being the parents of Junaid and I, even after the divorce and when people were saying “Oh, I’m so sorry to hear about your parents’ divorce, I would be like “What are you talking about? It’s not a bad thing. Another privilege that I had not realized. It could be something that could scare you. It didn’t scare me. I don’t remember most of them, but I didn’t feel like my parents’ divorce would bother me. So that can’t be the reason I feel so sad. “
In the video, Ira also spoke of his “privilege” and asked in his caption: “If I feel a certain way, a certain way not pleasant, then how many can rationally try to explain these things to me? Shouldn’t I rather get up and try to fix things? What if I can I shouldn’t ask for help? “
Here is the video shared by Ira Khan:
HINDI VERSION – LINK IN BIO. I never told anyone about anything because I assumed my privilege meant I had to run my affairs on my own, or if there was something bigger it would make people have need a better answer than “I don’t know”. It made me feel like I needed a better answer and until I got that answer my feelings weren’t something I should bother someone else with. No problem was big enough to think about it too long. What would someone do? I had everything. What would someone say? I had said everything. I still think there’s a little part of me that thinks that I’m making this up, that I have nothing to feel bad about, that I’m not trying hard enough, that maybe I overreact. Old habits die hard. It takes me feeling the worst to make myself believe it’s bad enough to be taken seriously. And no matter how many things I have, how nice people are to me because of my dad, how nice people are to me because they love me and care about me .. .if I feel a certain way, a certain way not nice, then how many rationally can try to explain these things to me? Shouldn’t I get up and try to fix things instead? What if I can’t do this for myself? Shouldn’t I ask for help? . . . #mental health # privilege # depression #repression #divorce #sexualabuse #letstalk #betterlatethannever #letitout #depressionhelp #askforhelp
In terms of work, Ira Khan made her directorial debut last year, with a theatrical adaptation of Euripides’ Medea, who played Hazel Keech in the lead role.